Abstract

The application of three-dimensional (3D) reconstruction has been extensively adopted in hepatectomy navigation,1 yet its utilization in laparoscopic radical resection of perihilar cholangiocarcinoma (pHCCA) remains underexplored. A 54-year-old male patient, classified as Child-Pugh B, presented a small neoplasm situated at the left hepatic duct proximate to the right hepatic and common hepatic ducts. An enhanced abdominal computed tomographic scan identified a solitary lesion measuring 2.8×2.4 cm. 3D reconstruction exposed tumor invasion into the left hepatic artery and left portal vein. Given the lesion's unique location, a pure laparoscopic left hepatectomy and caudate lobectomy were executed using a no-touch enblock technique post patient consent. Concurrently, extrahepatic bile duct resection, radical lymphadenectomy with skeletonization, and biliary reconstruction were performed. The 3D reconstruction-guided laparoscopic left hepatectomy and caudate lobectomy were successfully completed in 425min with minimal blood loss (50mL). The histological grading was T2bN0M0 (stage II). The patient was discharged on the sixth postoperative day without complications, and postoperative treatment included mono-drug chemotherapy with capecitabine. No recurrence was observed at the 6-month follow-up. Our experience suggests that 3D reconstruction-guided laparoscopic radical resection may offer increased precision and efficiency in selected pHCCA patients. This approach can potentially yield outcomes comparable with or superior to open surgery, given standardized lymph node dissection by skeletonization, use of the no-touch enblock technique, appropriate digestive tract reconstruction, and reduced bleeding and liver damage.

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